ANKARA: Aliyev: Turkey And Azerbaijan Are The Closest Allies Of Each

Anadolu Agency
Feb 8 2005

Aliyev: Turkey And Azerbaijan Are The Closest Allies Of Each Other

Anadolu Agency: 2/7/2005
BAKU – Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has stated that Turkey and
Azerbaijan are the closest allies of each other. ”Turkey has always
stood by Azerbaijan,” said Aliyev.

Aliyev hosted Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc and his
delegation at the Presidential Palace.

In a speech delivered at the palace, Aliyev stressed that relations
in all areas are developing rapidly between Turkey and Azerbaijan.
”It is pleasing to see the developments between our two countries in
the areas of economy and politics. The Turkish investments in
Azerbaijan are very prominent for the future of Azerbaijan,” told
Aliyev.

According to Aliyev, Turkey stands by Azerbaijan in the issue of
Upper Karabakh. ”We always feel Turkey’s support to Azerbaijan,”
expressed Aliyev.

Aliyev thanked Arinc for Turkey’s support that led to the adoption of
a decision by the European Council that describes Armenia’s actions
in Karabakh as ”an occupation of Azeri territory”.

Aliyev indicated that the understanding of ”one nation, two
governments” will always exist between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Arinc expressed a desire to see the end of Armenian occupation of
Karabakh. ”We want the Armenian occupation to end soon and no longer
wish to see tyranny in Karabakh,” said Arinc.

Aliyev will host a dinner tonight in honor of Arinc and his
delegation.

ANKARA: Azerbaijani Parliament Speaker: Turkish Parliament ShouldRec

Anadolu Agency
Feb 8 2005

Azerbaijani Parliament Speaker: Turkish Parliament Should Recognize
Massacre Of Azeris In Khojaly In 1992 As A Genocide

Anadolu Agency: 2/7/2005
BAKU – Azerbaijani Parliament Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov has stated
that the Turkish parliament should recognize the massacre of Azeris
by Armenians in Khojaly in 1992 as a genocide.

During meetings between the two countries` delegations headed by
Alasgarov and Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc, Alasgarov made
a request from the Turkish parliament to recognize the massacre of
Azeris by Armenians in 1992 as a “genocide“.

Arinc assured Alasgarov that he would bring this matter to the
attention of the Turkish parliament on February 26th, the day that
marks the 13th anniversary of the Armenian massacre of Azeris in
Khojaly.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijani parliamentarians proposed that Turkey and
Azerbaijan establish a museum of “martyrs“.

Arinc told the Azerbaijani deputies that Turkey would cooperate with
Azerbaijan in opening of such a museum.

ANKARA: Arinc: The Armenian Occupation Of Azeri Territory Is Cruelty

Anadolu Agency
Feb 8 2005

Arinc: The Armenian Occupation Of Azeri Territory Is Cruelty

Anadolu Agency: 2/7/2005

BAKU – Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc has stated that the
Armenian occupation of over 20 percent of Azeri territory is cruelty.
“Despite UN resolutions, Armenia continues to occupy Azeri land,”
said Arinc.

In a meeting with Arinc, the Azeri Parliament’s Speaker Murtuz
Alasgarov told that the real genocide was committed by the Armenians
in 1992 in Khojaly.

After Arinc and Alasgarov’s meeting, delegations from the two countries
started discussions.

“The relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan are developing every
single day. Our relations have reached a strategic level,” remarked
Alasgarov.

“Turkey has helped Azerbaijan in convincing the European Council
Parliamentary Assembly to recognize the Armenian occupation of Azeri
soil and make a call on the Armenians to withdraw from the occupied
territory. We are thankful to Turkey,” stressed Alasgarov. “Armenia
asserts that the Turks committed a genocide against Armenians. When
one looks at history books, he comes to the conclusion that no
genocide took place in 1915. The actual genocide was committed by
the Armenians in 1992 in Khojaly. More than 1,000 Azeris were shot to
death and wounded. Armenians have attempted a massive genocide on the
Azeris. The Armenians have forced about 250,000 Azeris to leave their
homes after 1980. 20 percent of our land is currently under Armenian
occupation. Over one million Azeri citizens have been forced out of
their homes and have to live in tents. We hope to resolve our dispute
with Armenia peacefully and support the Minsk Peace Process. Karabagh
is Azeri territory and we do not accept an Armenian government there.
Armenians must immediately withdraw from Azeri territory and Azeri
refugees must return to their homes,” stressed Alasgarov.

Arinc added that the United Nations adopted four resolutions to force
Armenian troops out of Azeri territory. “Yet, Armenia continues to
refuse abiding by UN decisions. Turkey supports a solution under the
Minsk Process. For the past 10 years, Armenia has been occupying Azeri
territory. Turkey will continue to give support to Azerbaijan in all
platforms,” expressed Arinc.

Arinc delivered an invitation to Alasgarov to attend the 85th
anniversary of the foundation of the Turkish parliament. “At the time
the Turkish parliament was established, Turkish territory was also
under occupation,” commented Arinc. According to Alasgarov, Azerbaijan
attach great importance to the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline and
Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum natural gas project. On the other hand Arinc has
reminded that the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline will be completed
within 2005. “Our countries cooperate in many platforms,” told Arinc.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Interests and aspirations clash in region of frozen conflicts

Interests and aspirations clash in region of frozen conflicts
By Simon Tisdall

The Guardian
Feb 8 2005

The ancient Greeks called it Pontus Axeinus – the inhospitable sea.
Jason and the Argonauts sailed its turbid waters, seeking the Golden
Fleece in the land of Colchis, present-day Georgia. Turks who feared
its lowering storms called it Kara Dengiz, hence its English name.
Now the Black Sea, contested through history by Roman emperors,
Russian tsars, Nazi and Soviet totalitarians and, inevitably, by
British imperialists in the Crimea in the 1850s, is once again emerging
as a strategic amphitheatre of clashing interests and aspirations.

When Romania and Bulgaria join the EU in 2007, modern Europe’s new
frontier will come hard up against the rumbling underbelly of Russia’s
collapsed empire.

Arrayed around this new Black Sea bullring, an encircling host of
failed, floundering or would-be states must soon decide whether their
future lies within the Euro-Atlantic community.

It is here that defining 21st-century battles over identity, security,
democratic values, oil, and migration will be waged. And it is here
that an ever-enlarging Europe’s limitations, political as well as
geographical, may finally be painfully exposed.

Romania’s reformist leader, Traian Basescu, who watches over a
lengthy tract of western Black Sea coast, is keenly attuned to this
challenge. He won the presidency last December in Romania’s quieter
version of neighbouring Ukraine’s “orange revolution”.

Mr Basescu’s visit to London last week amounted to an early warning.
In his view Romania is becoming a frontline state in what governments
now call the Greater Black Sea region.

“The common security threats that we face are many. The Black Sea
region has become an area for trafficking in people, in drugs and
weapons,” Mr Basescu said.

“It is an area of frozen conflicts. These are threats for all Nato and
EU members. In this region we are in a democratic transition period, a
period of emerging democracies – and that presents an element of risk.”

Romania has been offered additional British help in fighting corruption
and organised crime, curbing illegal immigration and preparing for
EU membership, diplomats said.

Both Romania and Bulgaria are already Nato members. And the Bucharest
government, which has offered military base facilities to the US at
Constanta, has purchased two ex-Royal Navy frigates.

Yet while Romania, Bulgaria, and more precariously, Ukraine, have
made their pro-western choice, the fate of many regional states and
peoples hangs in the balance.

Moldova, sandwiched between Romania and Ukraine, is one of the most
dangerous of the “frozen conflicts” of which Mr Basescu warned.
Located in an area once known as Bessarabia, Moldova is the poorest
country in Europe, divided since independence in 1991 by a secessionist
movement in eastern Transdniestria.

Now Moldova’s communist leaders, facing elections next month, have
broken with their traditional ally, Russia, and are pursuing EU
integration. President Vladimir Voronin appealed last week for western
assistance, saying separatist “armed units” were bent on provoking a
crisis. Moldova has also asked in vain that Russia withdraw its troops.

Almost unnoticed, the EU published an “action plan” in December,
inviting Moldova “to enter into intensified political, security and
economic relations” and describing a Transdniestria solution as a
“key objective”. In short, Moldova is a looming European problem.

Similar disputes requiring international attention ring the Black
Sea. In former Soviet Georgia, scene of the 2003 “rose revolution”,
the pro-western government of President Mikhail Saakashvili is
still struggling with Moscow-backed separatists in South Ossetia
and Abkhazia.

Linked to Georgia’s future is the future of independence-minded
Chechnya, where low-level conflict with Russian forces still smoulders,
and the wider Caucasus region.

In Armenia an authoritarian government is locked in a cold
war with Turkey and Azerbaijan, principally over the enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh, where tens of thousands died in the early 1990s. To
end its isolation Armenia is increasingly looking to Brussels.

While insisting on political and economic reforms, the EU recently
included Armenia in its European “neighbourhood policy”. Self-interest
plays a part. Armenia’s woes have produced an exodus of economic
migrants; most head westwards.

Underlying all this is the Black Sea’s growing strategic importance
as an outlet for Russian and Caspian oil – another potential source
of conflict as well as wealth.

A sort of “best pipeline” contest is now under way. Russia is exploring
a new oil route with Bulgaria and Greece that would bypass pro-western
Turkey. From Athens, at least, this looks like a terrific idea.

Another pipeline will run from Azerbaijan via Georgia to Turkey’s
Mediterranean coast, deviously circumventing poor, ostracised
Armenia. Yet another could link Bulgaria’s Black Sea coast with
Macedonia, Albania and the Adriatic – with intriguing implications
for the Balkans.

While the EU gazes east and wonders just how far it can go, especially
regarding Russia, the US feels fewer constraints. It is determined
to secure its Caspian oil supplies. And its new military toeholds
on the western shore could in time be used to project US influence
across the entire Black Sea region.

Europe’s policy may be drifting. Russia may fret and storm. But
Washington reckons it knows which way the wind is blowing. Like the
ancient Greeks, it aims to turn the Black Sea into the Pontus Euxinus –
the friendly sea.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenia’s polished production & sales down 20%

ARMENIA’S POLISHED PRODUCTION AND SALES DOWN 20%

TACY Ltd. Israel
Feb 8 2005

February 08, 2005

Armenia polished diamond production fell by 20 percent US$245,751
million in 2004, says Gagik Mkrtchian, the Trade and Economic
Development Ministry’s official in charge of gemstones and jewelry.
Mkrtchian says sales fell 19.8 percent, and that the dollar’s
devaluation against the local dram was to blame for the drop in both
output and sales.

Last year, Armenia imported 875,748 carats of rough gem quality
diamonds worth US$189,052 million. This year, Mkrtchian expects
polished diamond output and sales to increase by about a third.

ANKARA: Alleged Armenian Genocide Appears in German History Books

Zaman, Turkey
Feb 8 2005

Alleged Armenian Genocide Appears in German History Books
By Anadolu News Agency (aa)

Turkish Ambassador to Berlin Mehmet Ali Irtemcelik has stated that
the removal of the alleged Armenian genocide from history syllabus in
the German city of Brandenburg was not realized due to a lack of
pressure by the Turkish diplomats.

Irtemcelik in a statement to Berliner Zeitung newspaper said
yesterday, “What is to be included the in syllabus in Brandenburg is
decided in Brandenburg.” Regarding meetings held by the Turkish
Consul General of Berlin in Postdam, he remarked that the Consul
General attended meetings to give the views of the Turkish people
about the incidents that caused the deaths of more than one million
Armenians during World War I, Irtemcelik expressed Turkey’s
understanding regarding the allegations were perceived as an Armenian
genocide only in the West. Pointing out that many important documents
regarding the genocide allegations were easily neglected and
Irtemcelik stressed that massacres undertaken by two Armenian terror
organizations in the region prior to World War I were not mentioned
at all.

Remarking that Turkey was ready to reopen discussions with the
inclusion of formly over looked documents Irtemcelik said, “Our
archives are open,” and stated that the party thatcontinually cancels
talks among historians expected to be held in Vienna in May was again
Armenian. The Ambassador has requested all scientists to investigate
all the events.

Berlin

ANKARA: Missionary Work and Minorities

Missionary Work and Minorities
by Ali Bulac

Zaman, Turkey
Feb 8 2005

The reason the West attaches great importance to the different groups
with religious or ethnic minority status in Turkey or in another
country, and its interference in the internal affairs of that country
by exploiting the conditions of the minorities, which to a great
extent need to be bettered, is its desire to use the minorities as
tools while deepening and expanding its fields of influence.
Throughout history, European countries have used minorities as the
Sword of Damocles.

In the 19th century, countries which supported missionary work the
most were the United States, Britain and France. The French acted in
very cruel and puristic manner against religion and the church after
the 1789 revolution; however, when it came to the missionary work,
the secular revolutionaries did not hesitate to boost funds allocated
for this activity generously.

The policies European countries have pursued regarding minorities
through missionaries, have been very tragic. In the last quarter of
the 19th century and in the first 15 years of the 20th century,
missionaries instigated the Armenians who had lived in peace for
years in the Ottoman Empire, and who were termed “Millet-i Sadika”
[loyal nation], encouraging them to revolt.

It is interesting to note that missionary schools are mostly opened
in cities where non-Muslim population is dense, it cannot be said
that missionaries show any interest in places where the non-Muslim
population is below 20 percent. During the years 1911-1913, 39
percent of Van’s population, 33 percent of Bitlis’ population, 30
percent of Izmit’s population and 24 percent Bursa’s population,
where missionary schools were highly effective, were non-Muslims.

The American missionary schools had great influence on the Armenians,
particularly on those who were Protestants. According to a research
conducted by Yusuf Akcuraoglu, “In 1913-1914, more than one third of
the students who went to foreign schools during the Ottoman Empire
attended American schools.” Those who graduated from these schools
participated in social life as a middle class people and the
intellectuals grew up with nationalistic ideas and indoctrinated
their coreligionists for the independence struggle.

Miralay Ismet Inonu who was the head of Erkan-i Harbiye [Staff
Officers’ School] in 1920, once spoke in the Turkish Grand National
Assembly (TBMM) as follows: “There are American schools and colleges
in the surroundings of Antep. Today, these American colleges are
Ussul-Hareke (action center) of the French. They are using these
American schools as the Ussul Hareke (action center) to inflict pain
on us and to kill our people. They attack and place howitzers there
and use them as warehouses. In brief, I think they were built not as
schools but as fortresses within our country.” In one of his
speeches, Mustafa Kemal talked about the rise of the spiritual Pontus
members at the Merzifon American school.

(TBMM Docs., Session 1, Article 1, V. 4, 2. Ed., 1942, p. 296;
Associate Prof. Ugur Kocabasoglu, Missionary Work in Turkey, Islamic
Research Journal, V. 4, Issue: 1, Ocak-1990)

After the second Constitutional Monarchy, Muslim circles started to
show interest in missionary schools as well. After the declaration of
the Republic, a remarkable increase was observed. One of the
important results of these was the number of the supporters of the
“American Mandate,” constituting an important percentage, during the
armistice years.

It is possible to see that missionaries were active in three main
regions during the Ottoman Empire:

Western Region: Istanbul, Izmir, Bursa, Izmit, Kayseri, Tokat,
Merzifon. Central Region: Tarsus, Adana, Antep, Adiyaman, Urfa.
Eastern Region: Erzurum, Van, Bitlis, Harput, Diyarbakir, Mardin.

Now it is the earthquake region, their main fields of action are the
coastal bands of the Mediterranean, Eastern and Southeast Anatolia.
There are studies being carried out in Hatay on the Nusayri
population. Studies in the Black Sea region, aimed at awakening a
pro-Pontus consciousness, are being monitored. It is obvious that
missionary work is not solely related to the spread of a religion or
proselytization, which starts and ends in the conscience of people.
Behind these activities, there are geopolitical, strategic, economic
and military benefits for the countries concerned. The missionary
institutions have a nearly 200-year experience in Turkey and a
historic reflex on Turks. I think these activities serve more than
one purpose. One of these aims is to form “a new minority” within the
country. Undoubtedly, they want to recruit this minority from the
country’s current population.

Turkey, armenia: Relatives of slain Armenians win New York LifeInsur

Turkey, armenia: Relatives of slain Armenians win New York Life Insurance claims

Monday Morning, Lebanon
Feb 8 2005

Just a kindergartner during the 1915-1917 massacre of Armenians,
Bedros Bedrossian, who saw his parents and baby sister killed in the
dying years of the Ottoman Empire, never expected a big Manhattan
life insurance payout. But Bedros knew little of a New York policy
his father took out in those brutal days that could now pay off after
nearly a century and so many generations.

Bedros’ daughter-in-law Anaid is trying to cash in on an
extraordinary case that has startled Manhattan bankers and thrilled
the survivors of a period in history that nearly erased much of
Armenia from the map.

For the New York Life Insurance company has finally pledged to pay
back what it owed to relatives of those killed during one of the
starkest periods of World War I.

“When we found the name of my husband’s grandfather in the insurance
company’s lists, we were surprised and thrilled”, the 50-year-old
Anaid acknowledged.

“None of us could hope that there would come a day when the victims
and their families could reclaim at least a straw from the haystack
we lost in West Armenia”, she added.

According to a US court ruling of July 30, 2004, the New York Life
Insurance would have to honor its obligations to all who can prove
their blood ties to those named in the company’s lists.

Armenia’s Justice Ministry has arranged for a group of lawyers to
help those seeking to apply for the compensation to put together the
required documents and dispatch them to New York before the February
28 deadline.

But the work launched in September proved hard, with many survivors
having escaped with only clothes on their back, leaving all documents
and insurance policies behind.

“We accept applications from people, we open cases, seek proof in the
archives”, ministry spokesman Ara Sagatelyan said.

Such proof includes birth and marriage certificates, letters,
photographs, and books published in those times and telling of
various families and people.

“As of now, over 700 people applied to us, having found their
relatives in the US company’s lists, and only nine of those still had
the policies. There are also cases of people that have the policies
but their names are not listed”, Sagatelyan noted. Over 180 ready
applications had already been sent on, he said.

New York Life Insurance had pledged to pay a total of 20 million
dollars, with the victims’ relatives due to receive 11.9 million,
three million to be handed over to Armenian charity groups, and the
rest given to the Armenian Church.

However, it was not yet clear how much money would be claimed, as
many of those listed perished along with their whole families.
Turkey, which formed the nucleus of the former Ottoman Empire, has
disputed the scale and nature of the killing of Armenians, and
objected to the term ‘genocide’ used by surviving Armenians and their
descendants.

An estimated 1.5 million Armenians are believed to have died between
1915 and 1917 in the last years of the Ottoman Empire.

“In refusing to admit the fact of genocide, Turkey also fears that
Armenians would call for compensation of their lost property and
reclaim the money Armenians held in Turkish banks for their heirs”,
Turkey expert Akob Chakryan told journalists in the Armenian capital,
Yerevan.

ANKARA: Strong Future Of Turkish – U.S. Relations Confirmed By Gul &

Anadolu Agency
Feb 8 2005

Strong Future Of Turkish – U.S. Relations Confirmed By Gul & Rice

Anadolu Agency: 2/7/2005
ANKARA – Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul and U.S. Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice confirmed strong past and future of
Turkish-U.S. relations, sources said on Sunday.

Sources said that Gul and Rice stated that Turkish-U.S. relations
were not based on solely one matter, and stressed that matters on
which two countries had differences of opinion could not have a
central role in relations.

Underlining strategic partnership between two countries, Gul and Rice
also debated Iraq and Cyprus in their meeting.

In the meeting, Gul underlined importance of a continuous dialogue
between Turkey and the United States, and said that problems between
two countries could be solved by a common vision.

On the other hand, Rice also stressed importance of bilateral
relations, and expressed belief that these relations should be
further improved.

Also confirming that problems could be solved by mutual talks, Rice
said that what was important was the strategic goals of the two
countries.

-IRAQ-CYPRUS-

Ankara expressed its concerns over Iraq and Kirkuk during talks with
Rice, and stressed that Kirkuk’s special status should be preserved.

Expressing Turkey’s views that peace should be assured in Iraq and
Iraq’s territorial integrity should be preserved, Gul said that
Turkish lorry drivers continued to support the international forces
in the region, sacrificing their lives.

Diplomatic sources said that Washington once more understood Turkey’s
views. Touching on Cyprus problem, Gul reiterated that Turkey wanted
a lasting solution in the island, and said that Turkey and the United
States should have close consultations.

Gul said that Turkey expected the United States to take steps to lift
embargoes on Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), and stated
that thus, the Greek Cypriot administration would have to take steps.

On the other hand, Rice said that they were working on what they
could do to contribute to solution of Cyprus problem, and stated that
they did not want to see the Turkish Cypriot side as the suffering
party although it voted ”yes” to the Annan plan in (last April’s
simultaneous) referenda in the island.

Meanwhile, two countries stated that they would do their best to
eliminate misunderstandings between them.

Gul recalled Turkey’s sensitivities about Kirkuk and the terrorist
organization PKK, and said that if the United States did not take any
steps to eradicate the terrorist organization PKK in the north of
Iraq, Turkish people, who had suffered much from terrorism, could
think that the United States was not keeping its promises. Sources
said that Rice’s visit might contribute to elimination of
misunderstandings in Turkey and the United States.

Touching on developments in the Middle East, Gul briefed Rice on his
visit to this region, and expressed Turkey’s wish to make active
contribution to the peace process.

Rice said that Turkey’s contribution was necessary, and underlined
Turkey’s role in the Broader Middle East Initiative. She added that
Turkey was a good model for the Islam world with its democracy.

Gul and Rice also discussed Armenian-Azerbaijani controversy,
Afghanistan, Iran and Incirlik base in southern city of Adana during
their meeting.

BAKU: Religious figures to discuss Garabagh conflict

Religious figures to discuss Garabagh conflict

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Feb 8 2005

Baku, February 7, AssA-Irada — The Upper Garabagh problem will
be in focus at a meeting of religious figures in Moscow on March
10. Ways of preventing the conflict’s turning into a confrontation
between Islam and Christianity and the role of religious figures in
the conflict resolution will be discussed.

The event to take place within the Moscow conference of CIS clerics
will be attended by the Caucasus Clerical Leader Sheikhulislam
Pashazada, the Russian Patriarch Alekesey II and the Armenian
Cathalicos Gariegin.

While in Moscow, the clerical leaders are also expected to meet with
the Russian President Vladimir Putin.*